A Tale of Two Bridges: The Poetry and Politics of Infrastructure in Nineteenth-Century Wales

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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A Tale of Two Bridges: The Poetry and Politics of Infrastructure in Nineteenth-Century Wales. / Koehler, Karin.
Yn: Journal of Victorian Culture, Cyfrol 26, Rhif 4, 10.2021, t. 499-518.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Koehler K. A Tale of Two Bridges: The Poetry and Politics of Infrastructure in Nineteenth-Century Wales. Journal of Victorian Culture. 2021 Hyd;26(4):499-518. Epub 2021 Medi 2. doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcab039

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Koehler, Karin. / A Tale of Two Bridges: The Poetry and Politics of Infrastructure in Nineteenth-Century Wales. Yn: Journal of Victorian Culture. 2021 ; Cyfrol 26, Rhif 4. tt. 499-518.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Tale of Two Bridges: The Poetry and Politics of Infrastructure in Nineteenth-Century Wales

AU - Koehler, Karin

N1 - 24 months embargo

PY - 2021/10

Y1 - 2021/10

N2 - Drawing on Brian Larkin’s concept of ‘infrastructural poetics’, this article considers and compares a selection of English- and Welsh-language poems, by writers including Eliza Mary Hamilton, Frederick Faber, Richard Llwyd, and Eben Fardd, about two nineteenth-century infrastructures that transformed North Wales and Great Britain’s relationship to Ireland: the Menai Suspension Bridge (1826), and the Britannia Tubular Bridge (1850). I argue that these non-canonical poems complement perspectives derived from parliamentary records, official reports, technical planning documents, scientific manuals, and journalism, enhancing our understanding of the nineteenth-century infrastructural imagination. Specifically, building on the association of infrastructural development and modernity, I explore how the poems under discussion participate in nineteenth-century negotiations about Wales’s place and future in the United Kingdom, and how these negotiations evolved between 1819 and 1852. I show that, although Wales was the site of impressive engineering feats and accelerating industrial extraction, English-language poems present the Menai Bridge in picturesque terms, drawing on popular images of the Celtic fringe that evoke timeless, ideal beauty. Anglophone verse about Britannia Bridge, by contrast, focuses explicitly on the infrastructure’s technological modernity but claims it as an English landmark. Both strategies, I suggest, effect an erasure of Wales – as a distinct cultural and political entity – from a future conceived as Anglo-British. Poems written in Welsh, and the work of Welsh writers in English, complicate this picture, not because they reject British nationalism and imperialism, but because they seek to embed a modern Welsh nation more centrally within those political and ideological frameworks.

AB - Drawing on Brian Larkin’s concept of ‘infrastructural poetics’, this article considers and compares a selection of English- and Welsh-language poems, by writers including Eliza Mary Hamilton, Frederick Faber, Richard Llwyd, and Eben Fardd, about two nineteenth-century infrastructures that transformed North Wales and Great Britain’s relationship to Ireland: the Menai Suspension Bridge (1826), and the Britannia Tubular Bridge (1850). I argue that these non-canonical poems complement perspectives derived from parliamentary records, official reports, technical planning documents, scientific manuals, and journalism, enhancing our understanding of the nineteenth-century infrastructural imagination. Specifically, building on the association of infrastructural development and modernity, I explore how the poems under discussion participate in nineteenth-century negotiations about Wales’s place and future in the United Kingdom, and how these negotiations evolved between 1819 and 1852. I show that, although Wales was the site of impressive engineering feats and accelerating industrial extraction, English-language poems present the Menai Bridge in picturesque terms, drawing on popular images of the Celtic fringe that evoke timeless, ideal beauty. Anglophone verse about Britannia Bridge, by contrast, focuses explicitly on the infrastructure’s technological modernity but claims it as an English landmark. Both strategies, I suggest, effect an erasure of Wales – as a distinct cultural and political entity – from a future conceived as Anglo-British. Poems written in Welsh, and the work of Welsh writers in English, complicate this picture, not because they reject British nationalism and imperialism, but because they seek to embed a modern Welsh nation more centrally within those political and ideological frameworks.

KW - Britannia Tubular Bridge

KW - Menai Suspension Bridge

KW - Wales

KW - civil engineering

KW - infrastructure

KW - poetry

U2 - https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcab039

DO - https://doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcab039

M3 - Article

VL - 26

SP - 499

EP - 518

JO - Journal of Victorian Culture

JF - Journal of Victorian Culture

SN - 1750-0133

IS - 4

ER -